tied with its ability to create satisfaction
for its employees and other
stakeholders.
Value ultimately depends on the perceiver. A child came upon
three masons and asked, “What are you doing?” “I’m
mixing mor-
tar,” said the first. “I’m helping fix this wall,” said the second. The
third one smiled: “We’re building a cathedral.”
Smart companies not only offer
purchase value but
also offer use
value as well. You invest $30,000 in an automobile and you expect
the dealer to help with respect to maintenance, repair,
and answering
a host of questions. Ryder, the truck leasing company, not only rents
a truck but provides a free book on how to pack and move. Nestlé
not only sells baby food but has a 7/24 service to answer parents’
questions about baby food.
Companies worry about spending
more money to satisfy their
customers. They need to distinguish between
value-adding costs and
non-value-adding costs. A hotel may consider adding afternoon bed-
turning service that would raise the cost per room by $2. Before do-
ing this, it should survey whether its customers would be willing to
pay $2 for this service.
If the answer is no, then bed-turning service is
a non-value-adding cost. But if the hotel puts an ironing board and
iron in each room at a cost of $2 and guests think it is worth $3, then
this would be a value-adding cost.
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